Government-funded health care programs in Tennessee would take a hit of about $73 billion over 10 years should Congress pass Republicans' federal budget plan, according to figures released Tuesday by national health care consumer advocate FamiliesUSA.

Cuts would be felt in a wide range of health care programs, including TennCare and Medicare.

Across the country, those cuts would total $2.75 trillion from 2013 through 2022, the analysis found.

"The House Republican budget not only slashes funding to the states; it would decimate health coverage for seniors, people with disabilities, children and middle-class families," FamiliesUSA executive director Ron Pollack said in a Tuesday conference call.

The House adopted the Republican budget proposal in late March on a party-line vote.

FamiliesUSA researchers used national figures from that plan to drill down to state-level data, the group said.

Specifying the losses to Tennessee, the group said the Republican budget would mean these cuts:

$20.4 billion in federal funds to support TennCare, the state's Medicaid program.

$30.6 billion in federal funds, available under the Affordable Care Act, to expand TennCare.

$17.3 billion in tax credits for families to buy health insurance.

$4.6 billion for Medicare in Tennessee.

No group supporting the Republicans' plan produced state-level data refuting FamiliesUSA's study Tuesday.

The website for the Republican-led House Budget Committee said the budget plan would strengthen Medicare.

The GOP plan, according to the site, provides that premium-support payments be given to seniors to help them pay for competing Medicare-certified health plans.

Any growth to Medicare would be determined through a competitive bidding process. Both ideas "will ensure guaranteed affordability for all seniors," the site asserts.